// 0[bB][01]+n?
0b100110100000110011110010010# 0[bB](?:_?[01])+# 0b[01]+(_[01]+)*// 0b[01_]+-- 0[bB]_*[01](_*[01])*# 0b[01]+% 0b[01]+# 0b[01]+((_[01]+)+)?-- b'[01]+'// 0[Bb][01_]+// 0[bB][01]+// 0[bB][01][01_]*[uU]?[yslLn]?-- B"[01_]+"0b110011// ([0-9]+)|(\'b)[01]+-- 0[bB][01]+// ([1-9][_0-9]*)?\s*\'[sS]?[bB]\s*[xXzZ?01][_xXzZ?01]*// \$([01]{4})(_[01]{4})+/ [01]+b// 0[Bb][01_]+([tTsSiIlLvV]|ll|LL|([iIuU])(8|16|32|64))?// [01]+b0b0001010101' \%[10]+`2_101` would evaluate as a binary number.|| num = 0b010101// The same as cLanguages with Binary Literals include JavaScript, Python, Java, Perl, Swift, Haskell, Elixir, Prolog, Julia, Zig, MySQL, Reason, D, Chapel, Coq, OCaml, F#, VHDL, C3, F*, Verilog, Eiffel, Opa, Futhark, SystemVerilog, Ceylon, AspectJ, NumPy, K, Felix, Isabelle, ooc, Logtalk, BlitzMax, Whiley, Jule, Monkey, Earl Grey, Croc, BlitzBasic, FloScript, MiniD, Savi, Aardvark, Speedie, parasail, Crap, nimrod, CBOR data definition language
Languages without Binary Literals include progsbase
View all concepts with or missing a hasBinaryNumbers measurement
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